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Zvenigora

Play trailer Poster for Zvenigora 1928 1h 30m Drama Play Trailer Watchlist
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Tomatometer 1 Reviews 60% Popcornmeter Fewer than 50 Ratings
A grandfather who trades in salt (Nikolai Nademsky) looks after his two grandsons, the idealistic nationalist dreamer, Pavlo (Les Podorozhnij), and the industrious Bolshevik worker and soldier, Timoshka (Semyon Svashenko). In a surreal, modernist story that leaps back and forth over a thousand years of history and Ukrainian mythology, the grandsons battle each other in a civil war. Soviet director Aleksandr Dovzhenko's first film in his Ukraine Trilogy was shot mostly on location.

Critics Reviews

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Dennis Schwartz Dennis Schwartz Movie Reviews The political film's main problem, which it never overcomes, is that the plot line is so murky. Rated: B Feb 27, 2012 Full Review Read all reviews

Audience Reviews

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Audience Member Full review on my blog max4movies: Zvenigora is a Soviet silent black and white drama about a mysterious old man who spends centuries to find a legendary treasure buried in the middle of the Ukraine. The movie is essentially an epic fictionalized retelling of the country's history. Using recurring characters, who should be seen as symbols or embodied ideologies, several historical struggles are retold (e.g., the invasion of the Poles in the 18th century or the October Revolution in 1917). However, as there is no real plot to tie the several episodes together, the movie all too often feels fragmented and disjointed. Together with the symbolic dialogues and that at least some basic knowledge of Ukrainian and/or Soviet history is needed to understand certain scenes, the overall movie alienates many viewers. And while the production values and the cinematography are often impressive and the mix of historical events and surreal elements is ambitious, Zvenigora falls short in presenting a coherent journey. Rated 3 out of 5 stars 02/21/23 Full Review Audience Member The search for a mystical treasure morphs into a commentary on the technological and industrial progress of Eastern Europe and the devolution of a strong moral sense in Dovzhenko's silent tale. It's to be expected that the director presents some fascinating images, but the cross-cutting that highlights the "action" scenes is neither subtle nor surprising, both of which describe the director's stronger works. Rated 2.5 out of 5 stars 02/20/23 Full Review Read all reviews
Zvenigora

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Cast & Crew

Movie Info

Synopsis A grandfather who trades in salt (Nikolai Nademsky) looks after his two grandsons, the idealistic nationalist dreamer, Pavlo (Les Podorozhnij), and the industrious Bolshevik worker and soldier, Timoshka (Semyon Svashenko). In a surreal, modernist story that leaps back and forth over a thousand years of history and Ukrainian mythology, the grandsons battle each other in a civil war. Soviet director Aleksandr Dovzhenko's first film in his Ukraine Trilogy was shot mostly on location.
Director
Aleksandr Dovzhenko
Screenwriter
Aleksandr Dovzhenko, Mikhail Johansson, Yurtik
Genre
Drama
Runtime
1h 30m